THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, MAY 7,1 i Jetmen, 'M' Nine Face In-State Rivals 'I Fauquier Returns to Action As Racketmen Play Spartans Diamondmen Try Titans; Stars Return to Home City ro 1 ' FOR ALL YOUR FORMAL NEEDS! F TUXEDOS Q WHITE DINNER JACKETS WEDDINGS-PROMS-DANCES "Special Student Rates" RUSSELL'S TUEXDO RENTAL SERVICE By TOM ROWLAND Special To The Daily EAST LANSING - Michigan's tennis team plays Michigan State here today, and, if nothing else, the match will be significant in teat it will mark the first time in which Captain Harry Fauquier will play for the Wolverines this sea- son. The diminutive junior has miss- ed out on all previous Wolverine action because of his participation in the Pan-American games and his subsequent illness upon re- turning home. But he'll be in his customary second singles slot today, behind regular high man Ray Senkowski. Dilemma This leaves Coach Bill Murphy with the problem of which one of .the five men he's been starting regularly this season to bench and as of the time of this writing, he's still undecided. However, he has decided on the doubles lineup. It'll be Senkowski and John Fraser first, Fauquier and Hal Lowe sec- ond, and Brian Flood and Bo Bar- ker on third doubles. Despite the fact that he lost his number one and two men from last year's 8-3 team, Coach Stan Drobac of MSU calls his '63 squad "potentially the best team I've coached at Michigan State. We have good depth and a group of boys who learn very quickly." The Spartans won seven of nine ,matches and captured the Cherry Blossom Tourney championship before breaking into the regular schedule this spring, where they've only lost two. State's netters are now 12-4 for the season after Big Ten losses to Northwestern (9-0) and Indiana (5-4). Junior Tom Jamieson holds down the number one post after moving up from number three last year where he was runner-up in the Big Ten meet to Michigan's Jerry Dubie. Jamieson, a Lansing native, showed that he's improved over last season with a victory over Indiana's veteran Gary Bax- ter last week. Drobac pulled Canadian Tony O'Donnell out of the sophomore ranks to fill the number two post this spring. O'Donnell was in- eligible for most of the eastern swing but did compile a 3-1 rec- ord. The Canadian ace won four straight city championships be- tween 1958 and 1961 Most Improved Captain Jack Damson will be at the number three spot, and ex- Kalamazoo University High star Tom Wierman takes number four. Damson won the number four Big Ten singles title two years ago. Dwight Shelton and Charlie Wolff round out the State lineup. Drobac has been tennis coach for the past five years and never once since he took over the MSU net reigns has Michigan State managed to defeat Michigan's net- men. -Daily-Bruce Taylor RETURNING CAPTAIN-Harry Fauquier, Michigan's erstwhile tennis captain, returns to the Big Ten wars today at East Lan- sing. The Canadian netter has been unable to play for the Wolverines thus far this season due to the Pan-Acs and a bout with the flu. By LLOYD GRAFF It will be like homecoming when Coach Moby Benedict takes his team into the Motor City to play the University of Detroit today. Benedict and five of his eight starters hail from Detroit proper or its outskirts. The Michigan mentor calls the city one of the best incubators for baseball play- ers in the country. Not all of the players groomed in Detroit migrate to Ann Arbor. U. of D. Coach Lloyd Brazil con- sistently snags some of the best prospects for his Titans. Dave Debuscherre was his prize posses- sion for three years. Can Be Tough Brazil cannot boast of another Debuscherre but he has an ex- cellent hurler in righthander Pete Craig. "Craig can be a very tough pitcher if he's on," said Benedict, "I suppose he'll be going against us." A good portion of Detroit's hit- ting is supplied by a lefthanded hitting outfielder named Ricco Zuccaro. Zuccaro hit a whopping .391 last year as a sophomore with five homers and 40 RBIs in 28 games. Start Roebuck Michigan will probably start big Dave Roebuck on the mound. "I think we'll split up the pitching and give some of the sophomores a chance," said Benedict. There will be no changes in the regular alignment in the field. Michigan takes a 10 and 7 rec- ord into the game for the season. Their conference record is 3-3. The Wolverines tackle Notre Dame at home on Wednesday afternoon, Big Ten Standings Michigan State in Ann Arbor on Friday, and MSU in East Lnsing on Saturday. Over the weekend Michigan's Roebuck, today's starter, showed his best form of the year as he pitched the team to a 5-2 victory over Iowa. Ron Tate smashed a homer with a man on base to sup- ply the crucial margin. On Saturday the Wolverines, be- hind Fritz Fisher, easily downed Minnesota in the first game of a twinbill, 6-1, but the hitting fal- tered in the second as Jim Bobel went down to his fourth loss of the season 2-1. Against the rugged U. of De- troit team Michigan will have to 1230 Packard NO 5-4549 wom- .. _.. Read and Use Daily Classified Ads combine hitting and pitching. it SPORTS SHORTS- Layne Quits Gridiron, Ends Fabulous Career TODD'S has just received Style-Setting Cotton MADRAS SPORT COATS a new shipment of This Week in Sports TODAY BASEBALL-Michigan versus U. of Detroit, Detroit. TENNIS-Michigan versus Michigan State, East Lansing p.m. TOMORROW BASEBALL-Michigan versus Notre Dame, Ferry Field, 3:30p.m. FRIDAY BASEBALL-Michigan versus Michigan State, Ferry Field, 3:30 p.m. SATURDAY BASEBALL-Michigan versus Michigan State, East Lansing. TENNIS-Michigan versus Northwestern, Michigan Courts, 2:00 p.m. GOLF-Michigan versus Ohio State, Michigan Golf Course, 1:00 p.m. TRACK-Michigan versus Chicago Teachers and North- western, Ferry Field, 1:00 p.m. FOOTBALL-Annual Spring Scrimmage, Michigan Stadium, 2:00 p.m. IhDALLAS (') - Bobby Layne, the salty old pro who quarter- backed the Detroit Lions and the Pittsburgh Steelers with an iron hand when on the field, has re- tired. The announcement came yes- terday from Steeler Coach Buddy Parker, who earlier urged his quar- terback to quit. "He's had a lot of success. I think it's time to call a stop," said Parker. Earlier the coach said, "All great players must quit some day." .When Layne was on the grid- iron, it was his show. He disci- plined the team members from play to play. Parker said yesterday he re- Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Kansas City 15 10 New York 12 8 Boston 11 8 Chicago 12 10 Baltimore 13 11 Cleveland 9 9 x-Los Angeles 12 14 x-Minnesota 10 13 Washington 10 15 Detroit' 9 1s x-Playing night games. Pet. .600 .600 .579 .545 .542 .500 .462 .435 .400 .375 GB 1 ;% Y 2% 3Y2 4 5 5 Y2 ceived a letter from Layne an- nouncing his retirement. "I offered him a job here as a coach, but he did not want it," said Parker. There had been talk that Layne would play for the New York Jets of the rival American Football League, but Weeb Ewbank, general manager of the Jets, said he had not contacted Layne. Parker said Layne would not be free to play in the AFL unless all NFL teams waived their rights to his contract. '* * * WEST POINT, N.Y. (AP) - The New York Mets, baseball heroes of West Point's Corps of Cadets, scored all their runs in the last inning of a seven-inning exhibition game yesterday and trimmed Army 3-0. The Mets were so busy basking in the adulation of the soldiers that they were unable to dent Ca- det pitchers Jeff Davis and Bob Johnstone for six innings. Larry Burright singled home one run in the seventh, and Jim Hickman drove in two. Tracy Stallard struck out 13 and pitched a two-hitter for the Mets. The New York team has been adopted en masse by the Corps. Met scores are announced at the Cadet dining hall and Met victories greeted with mighty cheers. LONDON (P - English soccer administrators probed allegations yesterday that players have taken bribes to fix games. The scandal grew over the weekend. To men named in the rumors-goalkeeper Esmond Mil- lion and inside-forward Keith Wil- liams, both of Bristol Rovers- were suspended by their club pend- ing inquiry. 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